A farmer suicide puts focus on Maharashtra’s callous state machinery, and on shady land deals involving a long-pending power project
Death can do strange things. In Dharma Patil’s case, it made him famous.
On January 22, the 84-year-old farmer of Vikhran village in Maharashtra’s Dhule district, consumed poison outside the secretariat in Mumbai. Six days later, he died at Sir J.J. Hospital. Dharma’s sons, Narendra and Mahendra Patil, said their father took the extreme step after several failed attempts to get fair compensation for the acquisition of his farmland.
“Ministers Jaykumar Rawal and Girish Mahajan visited us at J.J. Hospital,” said Narendra. “Opposition leaders Ajit Pawar and Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil, too, came. I just wish they had looked into our complaint before January 22.”
When I visited Vikhran, friends and relatives had gathered at the Patil home. They were mostly women, who talked in hushed tones inside the house. Plastic chairs were stacked outside, so that men could sit and talk to Narendra and Mahendra. Narendra runs a medical shop in Surat, Gujarat, while his brother teaches at a government school in nearby Amalner.
“It was in 2009 that the process of acquiring land for a thermal power station began,” said Narendra. “We received the first notice in 2010. It said the farmers would get adequate compensation. District collector Prajakta Lavangare also held a meeting in the village, and we were told that we would get priority in recruitments for the plant.”
Esta historia es de la edición March 04, 2018 de THE WEEK.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición March 04, 2018 de THE WEEK.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
The female act
The 19th edition of the Qadir Ali Baig Theatre Festival was of the women and by the women
A SHOT OF ARCHER
An excerpt from the prologue of An Eye for an Eye
MASTER OF MAKE-BELIEVE
50 years. after his first book, Jeffrey*Archer refuses to put down his'felt-tip Pilot pen
Smart and sassy Passi
Pop culture works according to its own unpredictable, crazy logic. An unlikely, overnight celebrity has become the talk of India. Everyone, especially on social media, is discussing, dissing, hissing and mimicking just one person—Shalini Passi.
Energy transition and AI are reshaping shipping
PORTS AND ALLIED infrastructure development are at the heart of India's ambitions to become a maritime heavyweight.
MADE FOR EACH OTHER
Trump’s preferred transactional approach to foreign policy meshes well with Modi’s bent towards strategic autonomy
DOOM AND GLOOM
Democrats’ message came across as vague, preachy and hopelessly removed from reality. And voters believed Trump’s depiction of illegal immigrants as a source of their economic woes
WOES TO WOWS
The fundamental reason behind Trump’s success was his ability to convert average Americans’ feelings of grievance into votes for him
POWER HOUSE
Trump International Hotel was the only place outside the White House where Trump ever dined during his four years as president
DON 2.0
Trump returns to presidency stronger than before, but just as unpredictable